Genus

Nepeta

The Nepeta genus in the Plotwright catalog — 2 species: Catmint, Catnip. Open any for hardiness, native range, wildlife value, and growing guidance.
Nepeta x faassenii
Catmint
A tough, aromatic garden hybrid (Nepeta racemosa x N. nepetella) that forms a low, spreading mound of scalloped gray-green leaves topped by raceme-like spikes of two-lipped lavender-blue flowers from late spring into fall. Sterile and clump-forming rather than weedy, it shrugs off heat, drought, and deer, draws bees all season, and is mildly attractive to cats — a workhorse for border fronts, edging, and dry sunny sites.
Perennial
Full sun / Part shade
Low water
Zones 3a-8b
Climate: moderate
Border
Pollinator
Filler
Nepeta cataria
Catnip
The true catnip: a bushy, aromatic, grey-green herbaceous perennial herb with toothed, downy, mint-like leaves and summer spikes of small white, purple-spotted flowers. POWO (Kew) gives its native range as across Europe and Asia, and it has naturalised worldwide. Its leaves carry nepetalactone, a powerful euphoric attractant for cats — roughly two-thirds of cats respond by rolling, rubbing, and chewing — so expect neighbourhood cats to flatten it; the same compound has documented repellent activity against mosquitoes and some insect pests. It is a tough, drought-tolerant, easy herb that self-seeds and can spread and flop, so cut it back hard after flowering for a fresh, tidier flush. It is hardy across USDA zones 3a-9b. RHS lists Nepeta cataria as a hardy aromatic herb for bees and culinary/herbal use and rates it fully hardy (H7). It is a traditional human herb too — catnip tea is a mild, calming infusion and the young leaves have culinary use — and a good bee and pollinator plant. Note this is the species catnip (Nepeta cataria), distinct from the sterile ornamental catmint hybrid Nepeta x faassenii.
Herb
Full sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 3a-9b
Climate: moderate
Pollinator
Border
Edible